Little Rickie
New member
. never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
Weird but briliantly true.
. never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
...
There was a decision to conduct a search made by his parents. They chose not to look for him themselves. Be it lack of gear, experience, etc. they had his trip plan and knew the planned route and they chose to pass the responsibility to professionals. I have absolutely no problem with this. SAR teams know what they are doing. However, negligent or not, there is a cost.
I think people would agree that much of the kid's difficulty came because he chose to go down Six Husbands Trail into Great Gulf, a choice roundly condemned by VFTT-ers. Had he bailed on Jewell, Caps Ridge, Castle, or Randolph Path he would have been down that night or the next morning at the latest.
If he was given that advice by an AMC staffer at Pinkham Notch, his choice can no way be called negligent as he would have reason to believe that to be good advice - after all there is a Forest Service logo on the sign and they are official cooperators. Furthermore, he should expect that when he turned up missing, that staffer would report the conversation to searchers and his tracks should have been found right away. And the staffer's name should be known to officials even if they choose to excise it from reports for privacy reasons.
Or was it just some hanger-on? Surely an Eagle Scout would not invent that story to protect himself? Anyone know?
In essence the negligence was from an agressive itinerary and straying from trails on his bailout (making it more difficult to find him).
I would say the trip plan in fact anything but useless - it gave his parents a general idea of when he'd be down, and a general idea of where he'd be in the mean time. When he didn't contact them within the specified time frame it alerted them to a potential problem, and gave the SAR folks an idea of where to start looking.
Not according to New Hampshire law. If cost applied "negligence or not" we wouldn't be over 300 posts.
So, I'm not buying his intended route was negligent. I'm not buying his gear was negligent. I'm not buying his bailout route was. I'm not seeing anything was negligent. In fact, quite the opposite.
4th question:
There is a big difference between doing scouting camping trips in the Pemi and doing a solo presi traverse.
Easy now, you're quoting me out of context.
Let us not forget that this young man did a remarkable job of surviving and self rescue. He should be commended for that.
I think this link has been posted before, but it is well worth reading
" The Criminalization of Risk", a comment by Marc Chauvin
http://chauvinguides.com/conditions.htm
I think you're forgetting a couple of essential facts. Namely that Scott survived for 3 nights in the snow in the Presidential Range and basically walked himself out. Whatever other gear you think he should have had can summarily be dismissed as extra weight since he clearly didn't need it. More gear does not make you more safe. The right amount of the right gear gives you your best chances (all else being equal). Scott lived. In fact he's no worse for the wear. You can't reasonably argue that he didn't have the right gear.YES... a solo presi traverse at the age of 16, in the month of April, with no overnight gear, no escape route planned, and your parent's blessing.
A scout's motto is "be prepared". Poor preparation and execution constitutes negligence.
The proof your honor is
"It takes an army of volunteers, sinking in snow up to their waist, four days to find you."
This kid got in way over his head, placed other people at risk, and is now having to face the consequences of his actions.
I think you're forgetting a couple of essential facts.
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